Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, August 23, 1944, Page 4, Image 4

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    PACE FOUR
HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON '
' rsANK JENKINS M ALCOUU EPLEV
Editor Managing Editor
iwnsonrr combination ot the Evenlni Herald and tin
iSSiKin Publlthed ! efternoon except Sunday
I nSlfnadflnd Pn. "tru Kl.mith F.lle. Oregon by th.
Ie"ld i Publlihlnt Co and the New Publl.hlns Company.
, SUBSCRIPTION BATESl
ki uintr -month I6c By mall month! ji a
6, .in-ier jeer S7.B0 By mell .year W OO
KtWrStia. Modoc Simiyou coun'lee -jo .7.00
rtut eaeond clftu nutter et the ooetofflce ol Klamath
Rj.'Sni? SaiI ao. 1006. under act ol conireefc
Member,
AwoeMled Preaa
Member Audit
Bureau Clrculetloo
Today's Roundup
M
EPLEY
By MALCOLM EPLEY
Y wife, who is my most ardent (and maybe
mv only) well-wisher, says I should start
i.-imn with something "light' and worK
my way into more serious
stuff gradually. So here goes
on something that's been on
the list for several days but
has been sidetracked for
things of seemingly more im
portance: That numbers layout which
appeared in this column the
other dBy, purporting to show
how the war will end at 2
o'clock September 7, Drougni
us plenty, of calls from dis
cerning readers. They recog
nized it for what is is an ingenious trick.
It showed, for instance, that Franklin Roose
velt was born in 1882 and is 62 years of age.
He took office in 1933 and has been in office
H years. Adding 1882, 62, 1933 and 11 gives
3888. One half of 3888 is 1944, and one half
of that is 872 the 9th month, 7th day, at 2
o'clock. ,
Franklin D. Roosevelt has nothing on you.
Take your own birth date, your own age, the
date of any notable incident in your life, and
the number of years that have elapsed since
that occurrence, and you, too, will add up
figures to 3888. Do the dividing by two, and
your life, too, will show that something big
should happen on September 7 at 2 o'clock.
(9-7-2). i
Your birth date plus your age totals 1944,
of course. Your marriage date plus the years
-you have been wed. totals 1944, of course.
Twice 1944 is 3888 and half of 3888 is 1944
and half of 1944 is 972.
Some readers got downright mad when they
saw through this one. One of them (we suspect
one W.W.) actually wrote anonymously to a
Portland paper about it and suggested that some
editors ought to be hung on September 7 at
2 a. m. This angry gent obviously had in mind
a Klamath Falls scribe whose name and office
title (see masthead above) have the same in
itials. You know who: me. There we go, get
ting tricky again. ,
.-..
Pride and Sorrow
PARIS ' today is back in French hands. It
-was captured from within, by Frenchmen.
But their triumph was made possible by the -great
Allied successes since D-Day. and a lot of
the boys you and I know Midland empire
boys who've been gone from among us for a
long time participated in those successes.
Some of those boys will never return to us.
Rejoicing which accompanies each major
milestone on the road to complete victory over
there is highlighted with local pride and tem
pered with sorrow. The bitter cost of war is
never erased by its triumphs.
No Lull Ahead
KLAMATH FALLS Is one of the major con
struction points on the coast, due of course
to the extensive military installations establish
ed here within the last year. Construction news
from this town frequently dominates the pages
of the construction trade papers of the big
coast cities.
While work Is still fairly extensive at the
Marine Barracks, the naval air station, and the
federal housing, project, other projects which
vrould room large in normal times are just get.
ting started. . : . ,
This week, for Instance, contracts' are being
let on school buildings at Bonanza and Dorris
which replace school plants destroyed by fires
last school year. These $obs will provide em
ployment for a considerable volume of labor,
and they will give the two nearby towns
excellent , new school plants that can be used
for many community purposes as well as edu
cation of the youngsters.
The major harvest season is approaching and
will require a vast effort and an unprecedented
volume of labor,
This is a busy town in a busy trading area.
There is no prospect of a lull in the near future,
. , ;
Nail Driving . ,
HERE'S a Sidelight on circumvention of OPA:
New lumber, but not used lumber, is
under freeze orders. A local, man who says he
knows it's true elaims that nails have been
driven in. new lumber here to make it salable '
as used lumber. - ,', - . '
' Keeping men busy putting nails in and
pulling them, out again is reminiscent of the
across-the-road leaf-raking of WPA days,
,
Free Enterprise Lives Again
TIME waB when it was an hour's job to get a '
shoe shine here, but recently, ' things are
looking up in that department. A lot of small
boys are in the business on the streets, and a
sailor or marine leaning against a building
while an urchin brushes up his boots is a fairly
common sight.
Furthermore, there Is evidently a price war
on. We were solicited on the street yesterday ''
by a lad who offered a shine for 15 cents. His
competitor, not 10 feet away, called to us that
he would shine 'em for a dime.
That breath of free enterprise was refreshing.
lit
MALLON
r-A Gem of Thought From (delta's--
. ! There was a cute little Frill "';.
Who when Rodney kissed her held still
. Then in her Diary she wrote . -.
This would get Rodney's Goat -I
closed my eyes and pretended it was Bill.
Stationery. . . . . . 10c to $2.00
AT I DELIA'S ;-.
By PAUL MALLON
WASHINGTON, Aug. 23 No private tele
phone or backofflce appendages were
involved in tne nuii-uewcy ironi page jocney
ing on worm prate.
The participants spoke all
they had to say In headlines.
But the refined politics, the
subtle parry and thrust, were
neglected in the reports, al
though these established
Dewey in a new International
character and will be of in
estimable importance in the
campaign.
The administration's cam
paign policy has been to play
n . U.. ...,11,., HO .1
UBWey. tu mi; fci.im. ... ... i
barefoot boy in iniernauoniu uuii,
experience or ability for leadership. To tear
down this conception has probably been the
most difficult technical task of the republican
leadership, because by common understanding
(without anv agreement whatsoever) partisan
discussion of war or peace has somehow been
made taboo. ,
At the same time, Mr. Roosevelt has been
using war and peace developments as his justi
fication for the fourth term. In fact, this has
been his whole campaign thus far.
Pome months ago I wrote that he intended
to go to Europe to campaign from the peace
table, but I understand now he may go to
China first.
Perhaps the Russians may not have. desired
to talk definite post-war political arrangements
at the top man level, at this time. Possibly
our conquest of the nazis may not have moved
as fast as expected. Either event, this current
Dumbarton Oaks conference of ambassadors and
undersecretaries may not be over when the
European war is over, and Mr. Roosevelt might
have to talk to Churchill alone in Europe,
rather than have a big conference before elec
tion. '
Was Hull Pleased?
THE Devey developments fairly well broke
into this general line of Roosevelt's cam
paign. It happened this way:
The Russian plan for an international air
force under a world organization bestirred
Dewey to speak out against domination of the
world by the big four nations to the detriment
of the smaller ones
This is a subject closer to State Secretary
Hull's heart than to Churchill's or Stalin's and
Hull may have secretly welcomed this help
f-om an unexpected source. But he handled
the matter in accordance with the administra
tion campaign strategy, retorting that Dewey
did not know what he was talking about, sug
gesting that if Dewey came down here he
would see there was nothing secret in the con
ference. . .
This . was supposed to shut Dewey Xip. but
he accepted an invitation which was not ser
iously intended, or even formally offered and
he came forward to fill it with an international
adviser of recognized experience equal or be
yond that of Mr. Hull (longer anyway). He
demanded that the big four keep their armies
. out of world economics and submitted the first
concrete proposal for post-war action that went
beneath the surface of generalities.
'..,..
' Dulles Outstanding
GEORGE FOSTER DULLES,, his mentor,
wrote the peace program for the Federal
Council of Churches and the American Bar
association, two elements which could just
about elect Dewey in this church-going, middle
class nation, if the race were close. At any
rate he is an old League of Nations man, where
. as the administration had set up a campaign
against ' Dewey as an isolationist.
Furthermore Dewey put his shoes on and
demanded internationalization of the Ruhr val
ley, something specific and far beyond the gen
eral agreeing-to-agree expected from the Dum
barton Oaks meeting.
What more equal, or fairer justice- could be
prescribed than that . the. area, formerly run
by an international syndicate of French, Belgian
and German business men untjl Hitler stole it
from them, restore with its resources the dam
age Hitler has donel '
The French tried to make the Ruhr pay for
the last war. The Germans always ouimaneu
vered them. Even after the French moved
their armies in January 11,- 1923, they were
unable to get lumber and coal reparations prom
ised, because, of German passive resistance.
The Germans finally got the Dawes plan,
whereby .they made others pay their reparations
to the French, and1, if I am not mistaken, they
borrowed money from us for that purpose.
Willkie's Bruised Nose
FINALLY' the French got 490 million marks
in cash and 491 millions in goods at an
expense of 184 millions out of the Ruhr, but
the internationalization of that area now would
not only destroy .--the roots of German war
power (leaving them only 20. per cent of their
coal and iron production) but it could be made
to pay. some of-, our own war- debt, since we
largely have financed this war,
Mr. Willkie has acted like a bear with a
bruised nose, and this has not required acting
ability. First Mr. Roosevelt tried to get Willkie's
following by. inviting him ;to come to the White
House. Now Dewey invited him to Albany.
He went neither place, but he spoke of "our
party" in lils telegram to Dewey, while he is
supposed to have told Mr. Roosevelt he did not
intend to get roped in politically.
Now the game here is to draw Messrs. Dulles
and Dewey into definite commitments as they
have come thus far. Some republican senators
fear their candidate will become involved at
Dumbarton in specific arrangements which will
not prove popular. I do not think so, (specific
agreements are unlikely), at least I believe
Dewey's intention is fully to protect himself.
. To date, anyway, Dewey thus has adroitly
moved to dispel the administration campaign
illusion of his incapacity and. isolationism and
interposed upon the basic Roosevelt campaign
scheme. In short, he has put his shoes on
and kicked.
SIDE GLANCES
Phone S4CS
HEMORRHOIDS (Piles)
Hernia (Rupture), Fissure 01 fistula
Such, disorder impair votu
keeltb efficiency iralna
POWN. s Ol ! was umvm
miecemaiiT ireaiaa intra
' id of people for th44Ul-
Una. Mo eoofioealeDt ffo
u I U S.1l
' tot elimination ot send for ,
F R RE datcrittHv Boaklant.
OpuveniflCi,M5r,.,W?,W.7o0;3O
Dr. C. J. DEAN CLINIC
Phyalclan and Burtmon
K. t. Cot. E fiurnilde and Grand A,
Telephone KAat 3916. Portland. Oraaofl
t : -
0 t 4 IT klA UtYKC WC T. IL tta U f. fT. Off.
S-lt I
"Ladies, nmke your dreams come true a soft seductive
charm, an irresistible allure will be yours after using just
one five-cent cake of this beauty soap I"
Market
Quotations
NEW YORK. Aur. 23 (APl Comeback
tendencies were dltDlaved by mutuni.
air transports and icattered Industrial
lavoruca in today stock market al
though many leaders itlll ware nee led.
td.
Closlne mioutloni:
American tan
Am car A Fdy
Am Ttl & Tl
Anaconda w
Calif I'acklna
Cat Tractor
Com men weai in o BOtl
Curtis Wrtiht .-
GeneraJ Electric - M..
General oMtora
Gt Nor Ry pfd
Illinois centra
Int Harvester
Kernecott
lock heed .
Loni'Bell "A"
Montromery Ward
Naih-Kclv. ,
N Y Central
Northern Pacific
Pao Gas St El
Packard Motor ,
Penna R H
Republic Steel
Ricnneiq on
Safeway Stores ,
Sears Roebuck ....
Southern Pacific ,
Standard Brands ,
Sunshine Mining ,
Trans-America
Union Otl Calif
Union Pacific
IT S Steel -
Warner FlQturu
, M4
. 40'.
lttf'.
l
38b
M'S
IS'i
93th
17
10'.,
. 80' i
, lOW
!'
'
3T,
, n
. S3
lb. alfalfa naitured lambs ll.l M, ex
treme top. packages shorn common light
Iambi SM.SO.BcUl. Cull tn nnrf owm
1. 00 -4.00.
CHICAGO. Aur. U (AP.WrA)fi1inte
hogs 10.000: total 13.000: active, fully
steady, complete clearance early: cood
and choice 1AO-24Q Ibe. tU.7S: weights
over 3-to ids. and most sou sn.oo.
Salable cattle 10.000; salable calves
1000; fed steers and yearllno generally
steady good and choice otferitta fairly
active other grade slow; total I18M;
heifer yearling $17.33: tliabla supply
good and choice sters f lo.oiMll.l.V com
mon to medium 511.00-14.00: both flood
and choice heifers $15.00-17.00; I'uinmon
kind scarce: cows in abridged supply;
strong to 15 cents higher except on
light canners selling at 94.75-0-23; strong
weight cutters t7.0o down; most beet
cows S7.30-ll.00; bulls strong; weighty
sausage offerings up to tll.M; most com
mon and medium grass bulls a7.TB4.oO;
vealer unchanged at 919.00 down.
saianie sneep auw; loiai sneep ww;
market fairly active and fully steady un
all classes; on double clipped lambs
$12.73, and two double Montana ewes
$3.35. clipped lambs and ewes all old
straight; early sales good and choice
native springer mostly ii4.307Ai medium
and good $13.00-14-33 cull and common
lfl.00-9 30: agrly sales shorn native iwei
up to $3 83, mostly M.Ttt down-
WHEAT
CHICAOO. Aur. (API
futum wfr under hadflnl prtwurt to
dr and Mm dtOrnd contract told t
n.w Miionil lowt whlU nt lluctinted
Potatoes
CHICAGO. Aug. 3S (AF-wTAi P"U.
toes. 7Bi on track 110: total V. S. bMd
men Is 718; supplies modertte; (or far
wtem stock demand good, market firm
at ceilings; for Red River valley Cob-
oiers and Trtumpna aemana iair, mar
ket slightly weaker: Idaho Russet Bur
hanks U. 8. No. 1. $3.M: Waihlnaton
Long WhIUi U. S. No. 1, $3.87; Colorado
coooiers ana Triumpns j. p. wo, i ,
U.fil: Wisconsin Cobblers U. 8. No. 1.
83.M; North Pakot Red River valley
section Bliu Triumphs U. S- No. 1. $3.00,
Commercial $3.60-75. Cobblers Commer
dais $3.33. White Warbas Commercials
$2.50: South Dakota Red Warbas U. 8.
No. 1, $3.13; Minnesota sand land section
Early Ohio U. S. No. 1. $3 88.
LIVESTOCK
PORTLAND. Ore.. Aug. 23 'AP-wTA
saiaoie ana toiai cattle zza; saiaDie ana
total calves SO: market active, steady:
common steers largely $8.30-10.50; few
up io vii.du: common -meaium nenera
$7.30-10.30; common-medium calves $7.00
O.fiO; canner-cutters S4.50-8.73: common
medium bulls 87.0050: cutters $6.00;
medium-good vealers 813.00-14.00; common-medium
$10.00-12,50; culls $7.00
0.00. Salable hogs 600, total 1400; market
active, steady on strictly good-choice
ffrades but some weakness on medium-
grades; top $15.73 on good-choice 100-
240 i os.: medium-good $is.oo-30; good
choice 341-270 lbs. largely $ 15.00; heavier
weights $13.50-14.23; light lights $13.50-14-80:
medium 813.8O-13.00; sows largely
12.00-60: choice light weight 113.00;
few feeder pigs $12.00-73.
Salable and total sheep 600; market
uneven; strictly good-choice spring
Iambs steady but common-medium weak
to 25 cents lower: good-choice wooled
spring lambs $12.00-75; medfum-good
810.00-11.50; others on feeder order $8.50
8.00: good shorn lambs $10.00-50; soma
on feeder order $0.00-8 00: medium-good
shorn yearlings $8.00-8.50; shorn ewei
82.25-3,00.
SOTTTH SAN FRANCISCO, Aug. 23
'AP-WFA) Cattle: salable 123. Active,
fully steady; load-lots good steers quoted
8M.50-J5.50. Yesterday, load medium
822 lb. grass steers $11.00. two loads com
mon soo-ooo lb. grass steers 810.00. raw
jigni neitere oii w-ii.uu. oaa packages
medium cows $11.00-11.75. Low-grade
she-stock sharply hleher oast wk. com
mon cows $0.00-0.50, cutters $8.00-9.00.
canners $5.00-7.00. Medium to good bulls
$0.50-10.50. Calves: 50. Steady, Good
engine veaiers 914.UU-14.50, UOQ 10,
calves $13.00,
Hogs: salable 250. Steady; few loads
gno( to choice 180-340 lb. barrows and
gilts $18.75, ceiling price, few 390-270
I". IW.w, UQUU BOWS
Sheo: salable 600. Slow, about steady.
Late Tuesday 450 choice full wooled 100
over a wide range, opening weak, rally
tng at mtd-session,
late dealings.
then easing off In
Cnmmiuion houses were sellers In the
t.h.t nit hui nnlv in one or two Instances
wero the offerings large. Resting orders
gave the market some support and gov
ernment buying- discouraged othar than
a eommerrlel trade. .
A prominent local operator bpufM
largo quantities of ry attar the Initial
downturn. Local traders and commis
sion houses supplied the offerings and
the late setback was attributed to a
lull In buying and the easiness of wheat.
Commission houses offered oats freely
and the market alio was affected by the
weakness of othar grains.
At the close wheat was unchanged to
1 cent lower. September $1 34'i-ifc. Oats
were, off H to He, September tone.
Rye was W to Vie lower. September
si.OT-i.CTtt. Haney was on v to w,
8 pta mber 81.14H.
WEATHER
Tulwar, Awi n, i .
Mix. Mln. Fuel:
Euftn m..,.7l 44 .
Kimth t.mi as a .
North B,nd 1 M .'
PortKnd " "I
Reno -,M M .
San FranelKO ..M fll .
luttlf 80 .(
run or thanks
We with to extend our heartfelt thanki
and appreciation to the people of Mer
rill for the acta of klndneae. the metialea
ot sympetny ana ine many Deeumut nor.
at offerlnaa durlna our recent bereave
ment, the lota of our ion. brother, and
grandion,
MB. AND MM. H. L. CHANCE
EVELYN AND ARCHIE CHANCE
MRS. CORALEE RIGSBY
MR. AND MRS. A. T. HARPER.
Whan Mmtthingybu'v eaten cauiea
ImpU diarrhea, rar toothing
tbpto-bismol. It bring! prompt re
lief to upsati in stomach and intei
tinei. Tutet food and doei food. Ailc
your drugglit tat PEPTO-BIOMOI. "
when your atoroach ! upMt,
A riOKWlCIt PRODUCT
FREE!
THIS WEEK ONLY
FLOWER PLANTS TOM rAM, PLANTING
IP YOV'll ENCLOSE 35 CENTS TO COVEB POSTAGE AND HANDLING
To edvertlie our new ilock et lovely ornamental flower, and ihrub, for
Fall planting wa will land free three of our cholceit perennial! to decorate
your yard.
1 Ballaaenna B.Ipnlnlom. A b.aetlful abade of iky bine, flewerlnf
In Jane and Jaly and nanally avaln In the Fall.
1 Beie Dawn. Twe fe three feet. Bare new variety developed at our
nnriery. surer pink flowen on loni (racial tiami. Very hardy.
1 Antbamll Xelway Hardy Mario.rMe. Two feet. A free flowering perennial
with .beautifully eat foliage and yellow dafiy ebapei flawara borne
during entire growing aaaian. Eipeclelty valuable fer cutting fer
. bouqueti.
In order that you may aee what strong, well-rooted flowen and ihrubt
wa will have for Fall planting, we will send you then three bright
colored ornamental! U you order Dili week. Then are ready for ship
ment Immediately. -
Eneleie 15 cent! te eerer peilage and handling and unl rear
reoueit to
' ' '
CLARK GARDNER
PERENNIAL SPECIALIST
711 American unliainr Seattle 4, Train.
' e BACK THE ATTACK! BUY WAB BONDSI
Mali
in
Mrs. Louis Knllnii and her
baby sou, who litis been lumiril
Jay Loul.t. rehiiiu'cj linmu thin
' . ... 1.-1..... ...U 1
WUOK Ilulll m riKiuiiiii f aua iiiui
piliil. Tito Utile boy, nccoiul
child in tho family, hits a broth,
or two yews old.
Mrs. Srcky, Chlcniio, mother
ot Mim. Wllllum litijium, hits ru
lui'iiod htimo uftrr M)ciulluu kov-
eral monlliii horo with her
dHunhtur, followinn tho nrrlvnl
of twin dntmhturg, born to Mr.
and Mrs. Hojiuis In May.
Mr. and Mrs. Marlon Kirkput
rlek have returned homo uftiT u
short vacation on tho coast.
Rev. ami Mr. Donnld Dnd of
Hie Mnlln frcsbyterlnn church,
who left Tuesday for Kugeno
wncre Kev. Uod will fill h pus
toritte, woro uucts of honor Ht n
community cnurelt dinner Mon
day nljiht. They wero enter
tamed hI.io bt.'uio leaving1 with
a dinner at Merrill.
Floors In tho niKh school have
been reflntshed this summer in
preparation for tho opening of
tho fall turn..
An cvcninK of pinochle was
enjoyed August U, ul thu homo
of Mrs. John Kcbar. with liluh
score going to Mrs. Jniues Otto-
mnn and second high to Mrs.
Everett Jones, Present for tho
evening wero Mrs. Jones, Mrs,
Krank Vletorlne, Mm. Jerry
najnus, Mrs. Tony Steyskul,
Mrs. James Ottoman. Mrs. P. G.
Wilson and Mrs. Emil Tofiel.
K. C. Wilson Is building t
largo potato cellar lit his ranch
northwest of Malm. The build
ing, which will euro for several
sucks of potatoes, is being built
above ground.
nir. and Mrs. Cecil Hunt and
baby daughter, of Bonanza,
were Malin visitors Monday.
Mr. nnd Mrs. E. C. Coleman,
Tulclako. have purchased SB
acres of furm land from Wllllnm
K. Anklln. The land Is located
on the Oregon side of the state
lino and is known us tho original
Anklin homestead, which Auk
Un . has occupied for several
years. Involved In the transac
tion is building property owned
by tho Coleman., located In Tule
lake, and the J. W. Saunders
leu.se on property lust across the
state lino from the homestead
site which the Coleinans have as
sumed. Coleman recently purchased a
number of purebred dairy heif
ers from D. W. TurnbniiKh and
with a number of dairy cows he
now owns, he will operate a
dairy in addition to a general
farming program.
.uAn.151'.n' long-time resident of
the Malin community, hns pur
chased 40 acres near Klnmnth
falls and has moved to his new
home.
. AS'0" Pollvka. accompanied
by Tony Caeka, left Sunday for
" visit with Polivka's son
nd his family In Snn Francisco.
The Happy Hour Bridito club
met at tho homo of Mrs. Jes
Smith August 15, with two tables
1? p'ty . H'8" -,corc went to
Mrs. Robinson and second high
to Mrs. Frank Victorlne. Mem
bers presont were Mrs. Charles
Hamilton, Mrs. Lester Schrolner,
Mrs. Charles Johnson, Mrs. Joe
Jacob, Mrs. M. A. Thomas and
Mrs. Robinson. Guests were
Mrs. Leo Dixon and Mrs. Vic
torlne. The next meeting will be at
the home of Mrs. Hamilton.
Orvillo Hammond. Montague.
Call., nephew of E. M. Hom-
mond, Merrill and Ralph Aubrey
and tho iuio ueorgo rianuuon
fiirmerlv of Morrill, Is In tho
Malin community for tho harvest
season. ,
Mr. and Mrs. John fablunek,
long limo resident of the Malin
community who huvo spent some
tlmo at Aloxundrlu, Louisiana,
have returned to Malin to live.
They wore aecompiinlod by a son-in-law,
Darwin Cliok and tho
thrca spout last wouk ut Mursh-
Mr. Jess WhltUtoh spent tho
weekend at the home of her son
Vent Whitlatch and family In
Klamath Falls.
Mrs. Uemlco An gee is report
ed (o bo recovering from u re
cent critical Illness at Hillside
hospital. Mr. Augee suffered
an attack of paralysis. She Is a
sister of Mrs. Levi Griffith of
tho Merrill district and of llarvoy
Clugsdon, Malin,
Tuna, Salmon Catch
Increases For Year
ASTORIA, Aug. 23 (P) As
tuna and salmon catches con
tinued big and Astoria canner
ies asked for more workors, of
ficials estimated toduy that the
total 1044 pack will bo 30 par
cent larger Hum last year.
Tuna receipts continue excep
tionally heavy, and gillnntters
report salmon haul of up lo
30U0 pounds.
ClaasltitKl Ada Bring Results.
mum
burn o sunburn, rUv plnfui
chftflni, Uk ouch out of itchy
tnocqtiltn h,tc with Mmhiii. Iti
ptKiUI bnja httlrfet ahtrtrh tnniatur
on akin, often rauoo of hAi rh.
HoothtMi minor kin IrrJuUona,
(ctwrouc piira kmI littlo. Uomaml
M EX SAN A
SOOIHING MEOICAICD POWDln.
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Merri
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with her . u ?,rllitoa
Mrs. j,,;,:;,,:'"?""
d friend. herolHa
homo In Pinole an.,' ,WN
several day, 'r T'M
iiiyior, """vnnw
Tim MUui . . .
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church recVntiJ.W.In
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group plans a rn,-i.n I
unim.Be ,., fur
K.17.Ei,n.-!!"??..Wi.J
Tho '"emhoiswlllicrv,. J
for tho Itebeltah r,,","e.M
be held hero ScplomCT
S No""1
I '5? & Aident
rij tLI IUN
for tho Senior At(l
U ait 1
n.mtn l i( w
AT
Y0UH
l BsrasaeNTiMu tm
J EQUITABLE LIFE
I Anuronco Sociti.
i HtN. ?h n.m
bm m
Tmmati:D)es
For Canning
AT THE SEASON'S
LOWEST PRICE
Crate
rlaaaaanaaa
ill acta l II
GHEE? (IIM?
' ' iaaaaVaaai
MY FORMULA FOR
SUCCESS IS. . KEEP YOUR
rucniT nnnni
naaf sr Va' aan-
1l
They become increasingly burdensome. iTrequently
our "Personal Loan" service helps solve such difficult
ties - enabling you lo pay one account systematically ,
rather than distribute payments over many bills. Such . ,
: loan service is womot, friendly and conlidential.
Klamath Falls Branch -UNITED
STATES NATIOIVAI, BAJfH.
ol Portland
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